Weather Tonight: -2°c Clear Night Morning: 3°c Mostly cloudy

Critics' Choice

Film

Andrew O'Hagan

quotePrecious is a new-style weepie but one that is much more bracing than depressingquote

Andrew O'Hagan Precious Theatre

Henry Hitchings

quoteIan McKellen is captivating throughout. He delights in the play’s gallows humour, yet is also maudlin and poignantquote

Henry Hitchings Waiting for Godot Theatre

Fiona Mountford

quoteSlight quibbles notwithstanding, this will set the West End’s stock riding highquote

Fiona Mountford Enron

Reader reviews

Film

Simon, London

quoteUtterly, utterly brilliant. You really are in for a treatquote

A Prophet Theatre

Ella, London

quoteThough 'Trilogy' has won rave reviews, I personally found myself exasperated after about an hourquote

Trilogy Restaurants

Dave A, London

quoteWe went on a quiet sunday evening and the food was excellent, but the experience let down by the service and ambiancequote

Mansons

Pupils have no grasp of three Rs

By Dominic Hayes Education Correspondent, Evening Standard Last updated at 00:00am on 23.03.05

 Add your view

 

Pupils are passing national English and maths tests without grasping basic elements of the three Rs, teachers warned today.

Teenagers still cannot use capital letters and full stops correctly despite seven years of the Government's literacy and numeracy drive, say officials of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers.

The ATL wants the tests abolished. Union official Iain Freeland-said 15-year-olds he has been teaching, studying for a leisure and tourism qualification worth four GCSEs, did not know how to use the 24-hour clock.

He claimed the reputation of the national curriculum English, maths and science tests for 14-year-olds is now so dire that teachers are refusing to work as markers despite the generous payments on offer.

Teacher unions have long hated the national tests of 11- and 14-year-olds, which the Government sees as a vital indicator of the performance of schools as well as pupils.

Staff say they have to spend huge amounts of time cramming children to ensure they pass and make their schools look good in the league tables.

Now the ATL - seen as the most moderate of the teaching unions - has re-opened the debate about how much trust parents can place in the results.

Speaking at the association's annual conference in Torquay, to be addressed today by Education Secretary Ruth Kelly, Mr Free-land, head of humanities at The Challenge College, Bradford, said ministers must listen to warnings about the severe unreliability of the English tests at age 14.

The National Assessment Agency and its marking contractor Edexcel, owned by publishing giant Pearson, has to recruit 1,000 markers for these tests.

But Mr Freeland said they would struggle to get fully qualified teachers to

do the work and would have to rely on trainees and undergraduates. "We are not in the position where we can trust the results when they arrive in schools," he added.

" Teachers have to spend hours - even days - checking the marking and regularly send 50-60 per cent of the papers back to be remarked." An NAA spokesman insisted there would be enough markers this year, even though the tests, taken in the first week of May, are less than two months away.

The spokesman also said markers will be fully trained and that the NAA is committed to delivering results that teachers can have faith in.


Bookmark and Share
 
 

Reader views (0)

 Add your view

No comments have so far been submitted.


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 
 


 
 
London's Weather
Tonight
Clear Night
-2°c
Morning
Mostly cloudy
3°c
5 day forecast
 
 

Daily Mail Mail on Sunday Travel Mail This is Money Metro

Loot | Jobsite | Homes & Property | London jobs | Educate London | Holiday Villas